Helping Institutions and Ordinary People Invest Better by Focusing on Risk Control

Search

Subscribe via e-mail

RSS Feeds

Disclaimer

David Merkel is an investment professional, and like every investment professional, he makes mistakes. David encourages you to do your own independent "due diligence" on any idea that he talks about, because he could be wrong. Nothing written here, at RealMoney, Wall Street All-Stars, or anywhere else David may write is an invitation to buy or sell any particular security; at most, David is handing out educated guesses as to what the markets may do. David is fond of saying, "The markets always find a new way to make a fool out of you," and so he encourages caution in investing. Risk control wins the game in the long run, not bold moves. Even the best strategies of the past fail, sometimes spectacularly, when you least expect it. David is not immune to that, so please understand that any past success of his will be probably be followed by failures. Also, though David runs Aleph Investments, LLC, this blog is not a part of that business. This blog exists to educate investors, and give something back. It is not intended as advertisement for Aleph Investments; David is not soliciting business through it. When David, or a client of David's has an interest in a security mentioned, full disclosure will be given, as has been past practice for all that David does on the web. Disclosure is the breakfast of champions. Additionally, David may occasionally write about accounting, actuarial, insurance, and tax topics, but nothing written here, at RealMoney, or anywhere else is meant to be formal "advice" in those areas. Consult a reputable professional in those areas to get personal, tailored advice that meets the specialized needs that David can have no knowledge of.

Day: November 9, 2012

There’s one thing that is a little odd about me: occasionally as I am waking in the morning, something that I have been thinking about comes crashing in on me, and I get a moment of clarity where everything seems obvious for a complex question.

So to begin, I would like to say that I was utterly wrong in part 1 and part 2 of this series. It won’t work. Here’s why:

When is it safest to buy high yield bonds — when spreads are tight, or when spreads are wide? Of course, when spreads are wide. When spreads are tight, it is risky to buy corporates. But my method for allocating capital would do the reverse: it would force a lot of capital to be allocated when spreads are high, and little when spreads are low. That’s the wrong way to do it.

Second, most bond defaults occur because the borrower chokes on an interest payment, not a principal payment. If you can make the interest payments, under normal circumstances, you can refinance the principal. That indicates that the risk of a bond will grow less than linearly with maturity. It may even be flat.

The upshot of this, is that you would want to assign capital counter-cyclically if you could, but no one would go for that, it doesn’t fit human nature. So maybe a compromise works where there is a fixed amount of capital assigned across the cycle, and not varying by maturity. So how do you make adjustments for variable riskiness?

For corporate bonds that have a public stock trading, a contingent claims model can yield good results. Egan-Jones does that, though many of the major raters have similar models, that they watch as a check on their fundamental reasoning.

But many bonds have no publicly traded equity to give them estimates of value and volatility. Whether private corporates or securitized debts, there is no way to accurately estimate risks, unless you have a cash flow database of the underlying properties/assets, and aside from CMBS, that would be hard to get.

That brings us back to the rating agencies. Much as they failed on rating novel types of debt that the regulators should not have allowed regulated entities to invest in, the rating agencies did a good job in rating seasoned corporate bonds, both private and public, incorporating private data to sharpen their estimates of creditworthiness.

I know that Dodd-Frank has required Federal Regulations to eliminate the use of credit ratings. What have they substituted? Management judgement, simplistic statistical tests, nothing, and the ability to use quantitative rating schemes. My view is this: there will be a series of scandals out of this, and there will be a return to the rating agencies, where human judgment takes in the factors that can’t be crunched into an equation.